CS61C - Lecture 13

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Transcript CS61C - Lecture 13

CS61C - Machine Structures
Lecture 11 - Starting a Program
October 4, 2000
David Patterson
http://www-inst.eecs.berkeley.edu/~cs61c/
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Review (1/2)
°IEEE 754 Floating Point Standard:
Kahan pack as much in as could get
away with
• +/- infinity, Not-a-Number (Nan), Denorms
• 4 rounding modes
°Stored Program Concept: Both data and
actual code (instructions) are stored in
the same memory.
°Type is not associated with data, bits
have no meaning unless given in
context
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Things to Remember (1/2)
°Machine Language Instruction: 32 bits
representing a single MIPS instruction
R opcode
I opcode
J opcode
rs
rs
rt
rd shamt funct
rt
immediate
target address
°Instructions formats kept similar
°Branches, Jumps optimized for greater
branch distance and hence strange
°New Logical, Shift Instructions:
and, andi, or, ori,sll, srl, sra
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Outline
°Compiler
°Assembler
°Linker
°Loader
°Example
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Steps to Starting a Program
C program: foo.c
Compiler
Assembly program: foo.s
Assembler
Object(mach lang module): foo.o
Linker
lib.o
Executable(mach lang pgm): a.out
Loader
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Memory
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Compiler
°Input: High-Level Language Code
(e.g., C, Java)
°Output: Assembly Language Code
(e.g., MIPS)
°Note: Output may contain
pseudoinstructions
°Pseudoinstructions: instructions that
assembler understands but not in
machine (e.g., HW#4); For example:
° mov $s1, $s2 = or $s1, $s2, $zero
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Where Are We Now?
C program: foo.c
Compiler
Assembly program: foo.s
Assembler
Object(mach lang module): foo.o
Linker
lib.o
Executable(mach lang pgm): a.out
Loader
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Memory
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Assembler
°Reads and Uses Directives
°Replace Pseudoinstructions
°Produce Machine Language
°Creates Object File
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Assembler Directives (p. A-51 to A-53)
°Give directions to assembler, but do not
produce machine instructions
.text: Subsequent items put in user text
segment
.data: Subsequent items put in user data
segment
.globl sym: declares sym global and can
be referenced from other files
.asciiz str: Store the string str in
memory and null-terminate it
.word w1…wn: Store the n 32-bit quantities
in successive memory words
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Pseudoinstruction Replacement
°Asm. treats convenient variations of
machine language instructions as if real
instructions
Pseudo:
Real:
subu $sp,$sp,32
addiu $sp,$sp,-32
sd $a0, 32($sp)
sw $a0, 32($sp)
sw $a1, 36($sp)
mul $t7,$t6,$t5
mul $t6,$t5
mflo $t7
addu $t0,$t6,1
addiu $t0,$t6,1
ble $t0,100,loop
slti $at,$t0,101
bne $at,$0,loop
la $a0, str
lui $at,left(str)
ori $a0,$at,right(str) 10
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Absolute Addresses in MIPS
°Which instructions need relocation
editing?
°J-format: jump, jump and link
j/jal
xxxxx
°Loads and stores to variables in static
area, relative to global pointer
lw/sw
$gp
$x
address
°What about conditional branches?
beq/bne $rs
$rt
address
°PC-relative addressing preserved even
if code moves
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Producing Machine Language (1/2)
°Simple Case
• Arithmetic, Logical, Shifts, and so on.
• All necessary info is within the
instruction already.
°What about Branches?
• PC-Relative
• So once pseudoinstructions are replaced
by real ones, we know by how many
instructions to branch.
°So these can be handled easily.
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Producing Machine Language (2/2)
°What about jumps (j and jal)?
• Jumps require absolute address.
°What about references to data?
•la gets broken up into lui and ori
• These will require the full 32-bit address
of the data.
°These can’t be determined yet, so we
create two tables…
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Symbol Table
°List of “items” in this file that may be
used by other files.
°What are they?
• Labels: function calling
• Data: anything in the .data section;
variables which may be accessed across
files
°First Pass: record label-address pairs
°Second Pass: produce machine code
• Result: can jump to a later label without
first declaring it
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Relocation Table
°List of “items” for which this file
needs the address.
°What are they?
• Any label jumped to: j or jal
- internal
- external (including lib files)
• Any piece of data
- such as the la instruction
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Object File Format
°object file header: size and position of
the other pieces of the object file
°text segment: the machine code
°data segment: binary representation of
the data in the source file
°relocation information: identifies lines
of code that need to be “handled”
°symbol table: list of this file’s labels
and data that can be referenced
°debugging information
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Where Are We Now?
C program: foo.c
Compiler
Assembly program: foo.s
Assembler
Object(mach lang module): foo.o
Linker
lib.o
Executable(mach lang pgm): a.out
Loader
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Memory
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Link Editor/Linker (1/2)
°What does it do?
°Combines several object (.o) files into
a single executable (“linking”)
°Enable Separate Compilation of files
• Changes to one file do not require
recompilation of whole program
- Windows NT source is >30 M lines of code!
And Growing!
• Called a module
• Link Editor name from editing the “links”
in jump and link instructions
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Link Editor/Linker (2/2)
°Step 1: Take text segment from each .o
file and put them together.
°Step 2: Take data segment from each
.o file, put them together, and
concatenate this onto end of text
segments.
°Step 3: Resolve References
• Go through Relocation Table and handle
each entry
• That is, fill in all absolute addresses
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Four Types of Addresses
°PC-Relative Addressing (beq, bne):
never relocate
°Absolute Address (j, jal): always
relocate
°External Reference (usually jal):
always relocate
°Data Reference (often lui and ori):
always relocate
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Resolving References (1/2)
°Linker assumes first word of first text
segment is at address 0x00000000.
°Linker knows:
• length of each text and data segment
• ordering of text and data segments
°Linker calculates:
• absolute address of each label to be
jumped to (internal or external) and each
piece of data being referenced
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Resolving References (2/2)
°To resolve references:
• search for reference (data or label) in all
symbol tables
• if not found, search library files
(for example, for printf)
• once absolute address is determined, fill
in the machine code appropriately
°Output of linker: executable file
containing text and data (plus header)
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Administrivia
°Reading assignment:
• P&H A.8, 8.1-8.4
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Where Are We Now?
C program: foo.c
Compiler
Assembly program: foo.s
Assembler
Object(mach lang module): foo.o
Linker
lib.o
Executable(mach lang pgm): a.out
Loader
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Memory
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Loader (1/3)
°Executable files are stored on disk.
°When one is run, loader’s job is to
load it into memory and start it
running.
°In reality, loader is the operating
system (OS)
• loading is one of the OS tasks
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Loader (2/3)
°So what does a loader do?
°Reads executable file’s header to
determine size of text and data
segments
°Creates new address space for
program large enough to hold text and
data segments, along with a stack
segment
°Copies instructions and data from
executable file into the new address
space (this may be anywhere in
memory)
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Loader (3/3)
°Copies arguments passed to the
program onto the stack
°Initializes machine registers
• Most registers cleared, but stack pointer
assigned address of 1st free stack
location
°Jumps to start-up routine that copies
program’s arguments from stack to
registers and sets the PC
• If main routine returns, start-up routine
terminates program with the exit system
call
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Example: C  Asm  Obj  Exe  Run
#include <stdio.h>
int main (int argc, char *argv[]) {
int i;
int sum = 0;
for (i = 0; i <= 100; i = i + 1)
sum = sum + i * i;
printf ("The sum from 0 .. 100 is %d\n",
sum);
}
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Example: C  Asm  Obj  Exe  Run
.text
.align 2
.globl main
main:
subu $sp,$sp,32
sw $ra, 20($sp)
sd $a0, 32($sp)
sw $0, 24($sp)
sw $0, 28($sp)
loop:
lw $t6, 28($sp)
mul $t7, $t6,$t6
lw $t8, 24($sp)
addu $t9,$t8,$t7
sw $t9, 24($sp)
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addu $t0, $t6, 1
sw $t0, 28($sp)
ble $t0,100, loop
la $a0, str
lw $a1, 24($sp)
jal printf
move $v0, $0
lw $ra, 20($sp)
addiu $sp,$sp,32
j $ra
.data
.align 0
str:
.asciiz "The sum
from 0 .. 100 is
%d\n"
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Symbol Table Entries
°Label
Address
main:
loop:
str:
?
printf:
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Example: C  Asm  Obj  Exe  Run
•Remove pseudoinstructions, assign addresses
00
04
08
0c
10
14
18
1c
20
24
28
2c
addiu $29,$29,-32
sw
$31,20($29)
sw
$4, 32($29)
sw
$5, 36($29)
sw
$0, 24($29)
sw
$0, 28($29)
lw
$14, 28($29)
multu $14, $14
mflo
$15
lw
$24, 24($29)
addu $25,$24,$15
sw
$25, 24($29)
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34
38
3c
40
44
48
4c
50
54
58
5c
addiu
sw
slti
bne
lui
ori
lw
jal
add
lw
addiu
jr
$8,$14, 1
$8,28($29)
$1,$8, 101
$1,$0, loop
$4, l.str
$4,$4,r.str
$5,24($29)
printf
$2, $0, $0
$31,20($29)
$29,$29,32
$31
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Symbol Table Entries
°Symbol Table
• Label
main:
Address
0x00000000
loop:
0x00000018
str:
0x10000430
printf: 0x000003b0
°Relocation Information
• Address
•0x0000004c
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Instr. Type
jal
Dependency
printf
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Example: C  Asm  Obj  Exe  Run
•Edit Addresses: start at 0x0040000
00 addiu $29,$29,-32 30 addiu $8,$14, 1
04 sw
$31,20($29) 34 sw
$8,28($29)
08 sw
$4, 32($29) 38 slti $1,$8, 101
0c sw
$5, 36($29) 3c bne
$1,$0, -10
10 sw
$0, 24($29) 40 lui
$4, 4096
14 sw
$0, 28($29) 44 ori
$4,$4,1072
18 lw
$14, 28($29) 48 lw
$5,24($29)
4c jal
812
1c multu $14, $14
20 mflo
$15
50 add
$2, $0, $0
24 lw
$24, 24($29) 54 lw
$31,20($29)
28 addu $25,$24,$15 58 addiu $29,$29,32
$31
2c sw
$25, 24($29) 5c jr
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Example: C  Asm  Obj  Exe  Run
0x004000
0x004004
0x004008
0x00400c
0x004010
0x004014
0x004018
0x00401c
0x004020
0x004024
0x004028
0x00402c
0x004030
0x004034
0x004038
0x00403c
0x004040
0x004044
0x004048
0x00404c
0x004050
0x004054
0x004058
0x00405c
00100111101111011111111111100000
10101111101111110000000000010100
10101111101001000000000000100000
10101111101001010000000000100100
10101111101000000000000000011000
10101111101000000000000000011100
10001111101011100000000000011100
10001111101110000000000000011000
00000001110011100000000000011001
00100101110010000000000000000001
00101001000000010000000001100101
10101111101010000000000000011100
00000000000000000111100000010010
00000011000011111100100000100001
00010100001000001111111111110111
10101111101110010000000000011000
00111100000001000001000000000000
10001111101001010000000000011000
00001100000100000000000011101100
00100100100001000000010000110000
10001111101111110000000000010100
00100111101111010000000000100000
00000011111000000000000000001000
00000000000000000001000000100001
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Things to Remember (1/3)
C program: foo.c
Compiler
Assembly program: foo.s
Assembler
Object(mach lang module): foo.o
Linker
lib.o
Executable(mach lang pgm): a.out
Loader
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Memory
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Things to Remember (2/3)
°Compiler converts a single HLL file
into a single assembly language file.
°Assembler removes pseudos,
converts what it can to machine
language, and creates a checklist for
the linker (relocation table). This
changes each .s file into a .o file.
°Linker combines several .o files and
resolves absolute addresses.
°Loader loads executable into memory
and begins execution.
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Things to Remember 3/3
°Stored Program concept mean
instructions just like data, so can take data
from storage, and keep transforming it
until load registers and jump to routine to
begin execution
• Compiler  Assembler  Linker ( Loader )
°Assembler does 2 passes to resolve
addresses, handling internal forward
references
°Linker enables separate compilation,
libraries that need not be compiled, and
resolves remaining addresses
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